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Reading Week #102

05.27.2016 by Nicola //

botanics

Happy Friday!

How’s your week been? Mine was very busy but very good, with more fun plans to come tonight and beyond. As you’ll know, freelancing can be feast or famine, but right now things are feeling comfortable. Always a reason to smile.

Also, I drove a car on the dang motorway yesterday. It may not sound like much, but it was a big life level-up for me. What made you smile this week?

FYI, this time next Friday I’ll be taking a break in Copenhagen so Reading Week 103 will be with you the following week.

So, how about some links?

 

–– ON ROBOTNIC.CO ––

I posted a video Unboxing the Independent Booksellers Week Award Shortlists – all 30 books!

ICYMI, the latest Bookish Blether takes you on a journey through Our Most Anticipated Summer Reads.

 

 

–– ARTS & CULTURE ––

Grady Hendrix is hilarious on What [He] Learned About Women From Reading Novels About Female Friendship. Sounds like a thinkpiece, but it’s so much better than that.

You know I love the New York Times feature Letter of Recommendation, and if you know me well you could’ve guessed that I particularly loved this one on Movies Alone.

Rincey made a video recommending 4 Mexican authors, and I second Luiselli, Herrera and Villalobos. I haven’t read Enrigue yet, but he’s on my list.

I had a coffee date with the lovely Laura Waddell this week – and have been loving her books column from TYCI, called Spine. This edition is a must if you enjoy writing on visual art.

 

 

–– DIGITAL / LIFE ––

Washington Post is always great on digital life, and this week they’ve been looking at the digital lives of 13 year-olds. (They also let them take over the WaPo Snapchat account.) Here’s Jessica Contrera’s 13, Always: This is what it’s like to grow up in the age of likes, lols and longing.

Geoff Dyer was great on the Lit Up Podcast this week, and I’m keen to read his new travel collection, White Sands, which bridges non-fiction and fiction.

“But to see a place’s grandeur and beauty is always in some way to diminish that place, to pave over the smaller things, the day-to-day experiences of its residents, to Photoshop out the realities and the hardships. This kind of live-action editing is part of what we revile about tourists.” In related, Helena Fitzgerald discussed Dyer’s book for Pacific Standard, particularly his take on the Ethics of the Secular Pilgrimage.

 

 

–– ON PAPER ––

Pocket Penguin Classics

Over the weekend, I read my much-anticipated The Transmigration of Bodies by Yuri Herrera (my review in the next issue of The List). I also finished the very sweet Daphnis and Chloe by Longus, which I’d put down for awhile.

Since then I’ve been flitting around, not reading much of anything, picking up one book then switching to another. In the meantime, though, I got these gorgeous Pocket Penguins (pictured) through the post, along with the latest copy of Reader magazine. Weekend reading: sorted.

What are you currently reading?
 

 

–– &c. ––

I’ll be back in 2 weeks, but if you ever want even more links, Jessica Furseth’s Reading Lists are superlative.

 

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Your turn! Read anything good this week? Hit reply or tweet me!

Have a lovely weekend!
Nicola x

Categories // Reading Week Tags // link list, reading week

Unboxing the Independent Booksellers Week Award Shortlists!

05.23.2016 by Nicola //

Independent Booksellers Week runs from 18 – 25 June 2016 as part of the Books Are My Bag campaign.

This year is the 10th anniversary and the Booksellers’ Association invited me to be one of their ten official vloggers for the event!

As part of the event they are presenting the Independent Booksellers Week Awards. There are 3 awards: Adult Books, Children’s Books, and Children’s Picture Books.

They sent me all 3 shortlists – a total of THIRTY books – so I made a video unboxing them all!

Watch the video here:

Have you read any of these books? What’s your favourite to win?

Categories // Books Tags // Books, BookTube, independent booksellers week

Reading Week #101

05.20.2016 by Nicola //

Tea & The Argonauts

Happy Friday, friends!

I’ve had a mixed bag of a week. Some disappointing work-related news mixed with good friends and great reads, and getting back to yoga after my illness last week. My upcoming move abroad feels really close now – so lots of plans are afoot.

What are your weekend plans? Here are this week’s links to get you moving.

 

–– ON ROBOTNIC.CO ––

New Bookish Blether alert! This week we did one of my favourite episodes to prepare for – Our Most Anticipated Summer Reads. Lots of promising sounding new books on the horizon!

 

 

–– ARTS & CULTURE ––

I’ve never found the statement that, “You have as many hours in a day as Beyoncé” very compelling because it isn’t accurate – she has a staff. But the idea that I have the same number of hours in a day as Lin Manuel Miranda really lights a fire under my ass. Here’s a fun profile of him by the ever-excellent Rachel Syme.

Robin Wasserman, whose new novel is titled Girls On Fire, asks, “What Does It Mean When We Call Women Girls?”

Lindy West’s new book, Shrill, is out this week. She wrote in the Guardian about how the ‘perfect body’ is a lie. As a small person with a quiet voice, I am very into her message encouraging women to take up more space, though we ought to remind those who take up the most space to make room, too.
 

 

–– DIGITAL / LIFE ––

Ta’Nehisi Coates is excellent On Homecomings and the privacy-stripping nature of celebrity.

I don’t want to have children, but I’m not so certain enough in my conviction to make that decision permanent. Holly Brockwell did, and spent 4 years lobbying the NHS to have her tubes tied. The conversation she’s opening up about how women’s bodies are policed in medicine is an important one.

Hot Yoga Changed My Life, Body. This one from Anne Helen Petersen from way back in 2011 helped me through my sickly 11 days off yoga.

 

 

–– ON PAPER ––

Over the past week I’ve read The Story of My Teeth by Valeria Luiselli (wonderful) and the Man Booker International Prize-winning The Vegetarian by Han Kang (intense).

I’ve also been hoarding some new ARCs (advance readers’ copies) of upcoming releases for the podcast episode mentioned above, and can’t wait to get started on new books from a couple of my favourite authors and a few debut ones, including Yuri Herrera, Teju Cole, Emma Cline and Rebecca Schiff.

What are you currently reading?
 

–– &c. ––

The other week I linked to an interview with Jessa Crispin about her decision to close BookSlut. David took her arguments and applied them to BookTube (bookish YouTube) – and it turned out to be a really interesting thought experiment.

 

––

Your turn! Read anything good this week? Hit reply or tweet me about it, won’t you?

Have a lovely weekend!
Nicola x

Categories // Reading Week Tags // link list, reading week

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